The Mobile Asia Expo is scheduled to be held in Shanghai this year from 20-22 June at the Shanghai New International Expo Centre in Shanghai, China.

Mobile Asia Expo comprises of several components:

  • A world-class Expo, showcasing cutting-edge technology, products, devices and apps to mobile professionals and mobile-passionate consumers
  • A thought-leadership Conference for senior mobile professionals, featuring visionary keynotes, panel discussions and world-class networking
  • App Planet, where app developers can learn and expand their knowledge of the popular mobile app marketplace
  • A unique Deal Hub platform to connect qualified buyers and world class solution providers face-to-face to do business
  • And mPowered Brands, a programme dedicated to accelerating marketers’ knowledge and utilization of mobile as a marketing medium

The expo will have several App developer conferences which will feature keynote presentations, panel discussions, and encourage audience interaction on a wide range of topics.

Normally, 1-Day Visitor Pass is ¥ 100, but you can receive the pass for free during a limited-time “Early Bird” offer. All you have to do us to visit https://registration.itnintl.com/mae12/regonline/RegLogin.aspx and use the code EVP7F747

Notable App developer conferences include

  • Blackberry Jam sessions: Being held on Wednesday and Thursday, 20-21 June, these sessions will help developers fast-track BlackBerry application development and bring apps to the community of over 77 million BlackBerry users worldwide.
  • CMDC ADC: The CMDC ADC will introduce a host of customisable new products as well as keynote speeches on the latest developments in mobile applications and the mobile industry. Taking place on Wednesday, 20 June from 13:30-17:00, this ADC will include a lucky draw at the end of the session.
  • Nokia Developer Day: Nokia’s Developer Day will feature their latest achievements on Windows Phones and the Nokia developer support and incentive program. A special giveaway will be awarded to an attendee at the end of this conference which will take place on Wednesday, 20 June from 15:00-17:00.

Hurry up…Grab while the offer lasts…!!

Happy developing…!!!

If you weren’t able to attend the BlackBerry 10 Jam event at the start of May in Orlando to see some of the great Cascades presentations then here’s your second chance. To give a little insight, Cascades is a powerful new framework that makes it easy to create amazing BlackBerry 10 apps with an astonishing user experience.

A webcast on “Astonishing UIs using the new BlackBerry 10 framework’” will be held on June 19, 2012 at 11:00 am EST/8:00 am PST

Amaze and astonish with the Cascades framework

The session will include an overview of what Cascades is and cover the basics of developing in Cascades; after which There would be a live coding example and a brief Q&A period. You can register for the event HERE

RIM has officially released OS 2.1 beta for the Blackberry PlayBook. With the official release, the changes that the new PlayBook has in store for us have been unveiled. Here is a list where we mention the few listed by RIM:

  • Each Android app will now run in its own window. This greatly improves the user experience and consistency among the other application runtimes.
  • Access to the Camera hardware is now supported for Android apps, allowing many more application types to work on the BlackBerry® PlayBook™ tablet.
  • In-App Payment is now supported through the BlackBerry Payment SDK, so Android applications can include virtual items for sale in their applications
  • Portrait support for Email, Calendar and Contacts
  • Improved folder support including IMAP folder support
  • Improved HTML5 support, currently places PlayBook OS 2.1 in 1st place

This has raised further excitement in the masses to the rest of the OS 2.1 features. We will have to wait until it come full steam with the new OS released commercially!!

The 2.1 Android SDK will be released in beta coinciding with the OS release, and the 2.1 Native SDK will be posted next week, with an update to the Adobe® AIR® SDK to come shortly after. The OS 2.1 beta can be downloaded from various sites. The only necessary condition being: “to whitelist your Playbook’s PIN”, just like PlayBook OS 2.0 beta.

source

In an urge to motivate the developers, RIM has announced setting up the first ever Innovation Zone in the Asia-Pacific region. The report suggests that the Blackberry Innovation Zone will be set up in Kerala. Blackberry’s latest technologies and developer’s activities like: Blackberry Hackathons and Bar Camps will be showcased in this Innovative zone.

Alec Saunders, Vice President of Developer Relations and Ecosystem Development at RIM announced two more Innovative zones in India. These innovative zones are being set up to focus on making RIM’s mobile technology more accessible and training young minds with the help of Blackberry experts. The Innovative zones are equipped with 4G network, telecom labs, legal and intellectual property services, fully furnished offices and video conference rooms.

With the grey matter being utilized, we expect lots of Innovation at these innovation zones…!!

Simulators are always a welcome thing when it comes to development. And RIM know the importance of it. It has revealed a simulator for the recently announced BlackBerry 9320.

You can now test your apps on the simulator before making them available for public release.

According to an email from RIM

Dear BlackBerry App World Vendor,

We are excited to welcome the new BlackBerry® 9320 to the BlackBerry smartphone line-up and inform you that the simulator is now available for download.  Test your app today and get it ready for launch!

To ensure your applications are available in BlackBerry App World for this new device launch, we encourage you to test your applications using the new BlackBerry® 9320 simulator and navigate to the BlackBerry App World vendor portal to post your applications for the BlackBerry 9320 running BlackBerry 7.1 OS.  You must indicate application support for this new device as current applications will not be automatically posted for sale for this new smartphone.  Please follow these instructions:

1. Select Manage Products

2. Select the eye (view) under the Releases column of the app to be changed

3. Select (edit) next to the Release containing the bundle to be edited

4. Select ‘Add Release Version’ tab

5. Select the pen (edit) under the Device Support column for the bundle you wish to edit

Note: Many applications that currently support the BlackBerry® 9220 series should be easily ported to this new device with minimal change required.

You can start using this simulator immediately and RIM claims that it is super easy to use.

Happy developing…!!!d

RIM marketing has posted up a nice strategy for developers to develop more for the BlackBerry devices. According to RIM

Starting April 10, at 12:01 am, every 100′th app submitted to BlackBerry® App World™ will be eligible for a free prize package to attend BlackBerry 10 Jam. To win the prize package, the app must be approved according to BlackBerry App World Vendor Guidelines. Contest closes on April 26 at midnight EST.

The prize package includes a free pass to BlackBerry 10 Jam on May 1′st to 3′rd, 2012, a travel voucher to purchase a coach airline ticket to Orlando Florida, hotel accommodations while at the conference and $500 USD spending money.

The apps can target either a BlackBerry smartphone or tablet.

You read it correct ladies and gentlemen, every hundredth app will win a ticket to the BlackBerry 10 Jam.

You should get all the apps up and running for submission before time runs out…!!

Happy developing…!!

Research2guidance, the ever number crunching company has produced its latest report concerning development for smartphones.

In 2011 publishers created $US 6.8 billion in application download revenues while app development revenues reached $US 20.5 billion. The development service became a mass market almost 3 times of the size of the application download market today.

chart 1.2012 Research: Market for mobile app development services reached $US 20.5 billion in 2011

The market for mobile application development services, including application creation, management, distribution and extension services, has reached $US 20.5 billion vs. $US 6.8 billion in app downloads in 2011. Thus the development market surpassed the content market by the factor of 3.

Today most app project revenue is generated from classical app creation services (concept creation, design and coding). New service types like app libraries, white label solutions and multi platform app development tools have become more and more popular, but do not yet take a major share of the market.

Prices for application development services vary significantly between regions. UK developers charge $US 626 per day whereas competitors from India charge, on average, $US 138 per working day.

App development partners using price as the main criteria for selection will not be lead to an optimal solution as most of the price differences are offset by the additional time needed by offshore app developers.

App developers can get a copy of the 98 page report from http://www.research2guidance.com/the-market-for-mobile-app-development-services-reached-us-20.5-billion-in-2011/

Localized apps are the future when it comes to China.

ABI research has published its findings, the excerpts of which are as follows

Providing localized features for apps will drive 5.5 billion downloads in China in 2012. An example of a successful localized app is Halfbrick Studios Fruit Ninja for China, which includes Chinese zodiac animal images.

Working with local developers and social networks is another way in which foreign developers can localize their apps.

Research analyst Fei-Feng Seet quoted

Regardless of device type, successful apps in the Chinese market are those with a local look and feel and incorporate local content.

China has the most cellphone subscribers in the world, and it is adopting smartphones at an exponential rate. With this adoption rate and the emergence of different app stores,  developers who add a local touch to their apps are at a chance of earning higher than the others.

The BlackBerry Dev-con will be held in San Francisco this year, and the seats are filling up really fast.

 BB Devcon thumb BlackBerry Dev Con Americas registrations now open, Discounts available

You know how important it is to invest in the tremendous potential of mobile applications. This years BlackBerry DevCon Americas, October 18-20 in San Francisco is coming up fast!  Its where the developer community comes together to learn how to work with the latest innovations and breakthroughs for the BlackBerry platform.

Wed like to offer a special rate of $699 USD to you as a BlackBerry App World vendor so you don’t miss out on all of the content, insights, networking and more at the conference. Register now using the code DSRPA5 – don’t delay, the offer ends September 23!

This discount has been welcome by developers and they intend to utilize this opportunity to learn more about Application Distribution Services, Application Marketing Services, Carrier Development Programs, Custom Application Development, Entrepreneurial/Recruiting Services, Software Libraries and SDKs, Testing Services, and Translation and Localization.

There are sponsorships available this time and the sponsor prospectus can be downloaded from HERE to review the sponsorship packages .

Hurry Up, limited seats available!!!

GetJar, the very first app store of the mobile world, asked developers about their current and future development interests.

GetJar logo with shadow thumb GetJar tells us where the developers’ interests head to

The results were quite surprising. The polls figure said:

80 percent of respondents stated that they are developing for iOS for iPhone/iPod Touch today, which declines to 55.6 percent who are planning to develop for this platform in six months time. The same trend is seen in iOS for tablets, which sees developer backing decreasing from 59 percent to 52 percent.

In short, the popularity of app developers towards Apple is taking a hit.

Android for smartphone currently has 51.2 percent support, which will increase to 58 percent six months from now. And Android for tablets currently has 20.5 percent, which will more than double to 47 percent.

That means that the Android folks will not quit their remarkable exponential growth. The same will be reflected in six months time.

Interestingly,

Microsofts Windows Phone 7 platform is set to be more popular with developers than web apps, BlackBerry for smartphones and tablets, and HPs webOS.  Some 24 percent of developers intend developing for the MS platform in the future, compared to less than 9 percent today. While that is still less than half of the interest in Android, GetJar said that given Windows small base it looks like there is some optimism for the Nokia/Windows alliance.

Unsurprisingly, the survey noted a continued fall in support for Symbian OS, with less than 7 percent of developers stating they will be supporting the platform in six months time. Fewer than 20 percent of developers think the OS will be around in the next couple of years.

RIMs BlackBerry OS also faces challenges, with less than 15 percent of developers interested in developing for the platform in the next six months. Less than half of the developers believe the platform will survive the next five years.

While presently, around 80% of current developer junta is targeting iOS, around 44.4% of devs are targeting towards Android. The scales  will indeed be tipped in Androids favor in six  months from now, if the poll is to be believed, with over 70% devs developing for android.

The news is surely bad for already troubled RIM and HP, Symbian fans will be equally annoyed by this poll outcome.

But for Nokia-MSFT alliance, this sure is the silver lining of the clouds. Bad news for Apple though.

Stay tuned for more!!!!

According to Wikipedia,

A Patent is a set of exclusive rights granted by a state (national government) to an inventor or their assignee for a limited period of time in exchange for the public disclosure of an invention. The exclusive right granted to a patentee in most countries is the right to prevent others from making, using, selling, or distributing the patented invention without permission.

But this is just the tip of the iceberg. The hard fact lies beneath. Patents are granted for an uncomfortably long duration of  time. And companies are, and have been using, or rather abusing, the patent system to cut down on competition and kill creativity.

The instant question that comes to the mind after reading the above statement is that Mr Singh, are you referring to the Microsoft and Android patent wars and extortion? My answer would be yes. The world thinks that Microsoft and Apple are evil corporations that do not have anything else to do rather than bug small time firms, which are already hard on cash, with their lousy patent wars.

But they did not come with this ingenious idea by themselves. Probability is that someone from these companies might have had read history. And there goes a story 30 years prior to the present day.

When Sun microsystems was still in its infancy, in 1980, a team of men dressed in dark blue  suits visited its office to tell Sun that it was infringing seven of  IBMs patents. In the largest conference room Sun had, they all crammed up along with the employees of Sun, all of who had engineering and law degrees.

After IBM presented them with a presentation on how Sun infringed on IBMs patents, Sun meticulously busted their claims on a whiteboard.

The chief blue suit orchestrated the presentation of the seven patents IBM claimed were infringed, the most prominent of which was IBM’s notorious "fat lines" patent: To turn a thin line on a computer screen into a broad line, you go up and down an equal distance from the ends of the thin line and then connect the four points. You probably learned this technique for turning a line into a rectangle in seventh-grade geometry, and, doubtless, you believe it was devised by Euclid or some such 3,000-year-old thinker. Not according to the examiners of the USPTO, who awarded IBM a patent on the process.

After Sun had ingeniously defended its stance and proved that only one of the seven IBM patents would be deemed valid by a court, and no rational court would find that Sun’s technology infringed even that one.

An awkward silence ensued. The blue suits did not even confer among themselves. They just sat there, stonelike. Finally, the chief suit responded. "OK," he said, "maybe you don’t infringe these seven patents. But we have 10,000 U.S. patents. Do you really want us to go back to Armonk [IBM headquarters in New York] and find seven patents you do infringe? Or do you want to make this easy and just pay us $20 million?"

After a modest bit of negotiation, Sun cut IBM a check, and the blue suits went to the next company on their hit list.

Now comes  the story of the developers in the US. Apparently, app developers are withdrawing their apps from the US App store and the Android Market for no reason other than the fear of a lawsuit from corporations like MS, Apple, and companies like an Lodsys and similar kind who have gone on a patent trolling crusade.

These patents have grown up into a revenue generating tool. The trick is simple, you just find a small time company who infringes a part of your patent, and you threaten it with a choice: lawsuit or extortion. The small time developers, even if they are not guilty, are not able to bear the costs of defending themselves. They eventually have to give up.

Developers have responded to this with comments like

selling software in the US has already reached the non-viable tipping point

starting to get seriously concerned about my future as a software developer due to these patent issues

far too dangerous to do business in the US because of the risk of software patent lawsuits.

Screen shot thumb The story of patent wars and developer woes

Just imagine the tremendous loss of the consumer and creativity alike.

We wonder if the current patent system makes any sense for a free market economy? Even a child would deduce that the patent system, combined with extortion would do nothing more  than killing the introduction of new and better products.

Readers are welcome to share their thoughts on the same.

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